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1.
Systemic hypoxia results in oxidative stress due to a change in the reactive oxygen species (ROS)-nitric oxide (NO) balance. These experiments explored two mechanisms for the altered ROS-NO balance: 1) decreased NO synthesis by NO synthase due to limited O(2) substrate availability and 2) increased superoxide generation. ROS levels and leukocyte adherence in mesenteric venules of rats during hypoxia were studied in the absence and presence of an NO donor [spermine NONOate (SNO)] and of the NO precursor L-arginine. We hypothesized that if the lower NO levels during hypoxia were due to O(2) substrate limitation, L-arginine would not prevent hypoxia-induced microvascular responses. Graded hypoxia (produced by breathing 15, 10, and 7.5% O(2)) increased both ROS (123 +/- 6, 148 +/- 11, and 167 +/- 3% of control) and leukocyte adherence. ROS levels during breathing of 10 and 7.5% O(2) were significantly attenuated by SNO (105 +/- 6 and 108 +/- 3%, respectively) and L-arginine (117 +/- 5 and 115 +/- 2%, respectively). Both interventions reduced leukocyte adherence by similar degrees. The fact that the effects of L-arginine were similar to those of SNO does not support the idea that NO generation is impaired in hypoxia and suggests that tissue NO levels are depleted by the increased ROS during hypoxia.  相似文献   

2.
Systemic hypoxia produces a rapid microvascular inflammatory response characterized by increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels, leukocyte-endothelial adherence and emigration, and increased vascular permeability. The lipid inflammatory mediator leukotriene B(4) (LTB(4)) is involved in the early hypoxia-induced responses (ROS generation and leukocyte adherence). Whether other lipid inflammatory mediators participate in this phenomenon is not known. The objective of these experiments was to study the role of platelet-activating factor (PAF) in the microvascular inflammatory response to hypoxia and its potential interactions with LTB(4) in this response. Intravital microscopy was used to examine mesenteric venules of anesthetized rats. We found that WEB-2086, a PAF receptor antagonist, completely prevented the increase in ROS levels and leukocyte adherence during a brief reduction in inspired Po(2) to anesthetized rats; administration of either WEB-2086 or the LTB(4) antagonist LTB(4)-DMA attenuated leukocyte emigration and the increase in vascular permeability to the same extent during prolonged systemic hypoxia in conscious rats. Furthermore, no additive effect was observed in either response when both antagonists were administered simultaneously. This study demonstrates a role for PAF in the rapid microvascular inflammatory response to hypoxia, as well as contributions of PAF and LTB(4) to the slowly developing responses observed during sustained hypoxia. The incomplete blockade of the hypoxia-induced increases in vascular permeability and leukocyte emigration by combined administration of both antagonists indicates that factors in addition to LTB(4) and PAF participate in these phenomena.  相似文献   

3.
We recently demonstrated that systemic hypoxia during reduced inspired PO(2) produces a rapid increase in leukocyte adherence to rat mesenteric venules. Evidence suggests that the mechanism of this response involves decreased nitric oxide (NO) levels. One possible pathway for NO depletion could involve increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation resulting in inactivation of NO. The overall goal of the present study was to examine the role of ROS in promoting leukocyte-endothelial adherence during systemic hypoxia. Experiments were designed to 1) evaluate changes in ROS generation in the mesenteric microcirculation during systemic hypoxia, 2) determine how the ROS signal changes when PO(2) levels return to normal after a period of systemic hypoxia, 3) assess the effect of antioxidants on ROS generation during hypoxia, and 4) utilize antioxidants to examine the functional relationship between ROS generation and leukocyte adherence during hypoxia. The major findings from this study are that systemic hypoxia increases ROS generation within the mesenteric microcirculation and that antioxidants prevent the increase in leukocyte-endothelial adhesive interactions observed in hypoxia.  相似文献   

4.
Systemic hypoxia produces an inflammatory response characterized by increases in reactive O(2) species (ROS), venular leukocyte-endothelial adherence and emigration, and vascular permeability. Inflammation is typically initiated by mediators released from activated perivascular cells that generate the chemotactic gradient responsible for extravascular leukocyte accumulation. These experiments were directed to study the possible participation of mast cells in hypoxia-induced microvascular inflammation. Mast cell degranulation, ROS levels, leukocyte adherence and emigration, and vascular permeability were studied in the mesenteric microcirculation by using intravital microscopy of anesthetized rats. The main findings were 1) activation of mast cells with compound 48/80 in normoxia produced microvascular effects similar, but not identical, to those of hypoxia; 2) systemic hypoxia resulted in rapid mast cell degranulation; 3) blockade of mast cell degranulation with cromolyn prevented or attenuated the hypoxia-induced increases in ROS, leukocyte adherence/emigration, and vascular permeability; and 4) mast cell degranulation during hypoxia was prevented by administration of the antioxidant lipoic acid and of nitric oxide. These results show that mast cells play a key role in hypoxia-induced inflammation and suggest that alterations in the ROS-nitric oxide balance may be involved in mast cell activation during hypoxia.  相似文献   

5.
Systemic hypoxia results in rapid increases in leukocyte-endothelial adherence (LEA) and emigration, vascular permeability, and mast cell activation in several microcirculations. Observations in cremaster muscle suggest that this response is initiated by a mediator released from a distant site (Dix R, Orth T, Allen JA, Wood JG, and Gonzalez NC. J Appl Physiol 95: 2495-2502, 2003). The present experiments in rat cremaster muscle tested the hypothesis that, if a circulating mediator triggers hypoxia-induced inflammation, then plasma from hypoxic rats should elicit LEA in normoxic cremaster venules. Plasma from conscious donor rats breathing 10% O2-90% N2 for 5 min was applied topically to the cremaster of normoxic anesthetized rats. In this and all other groups described below, the donor plasma had attained normoxic PO2 when applied to the cremaster. LEA (leukocytes/100-microm venule) increased from 2.7 +/- 0.8 to 12.3 +/- 2.4, and venular shear rate and arteriolar diameter decreased to 79 +/- 9% (P < 0.05, n = 6) and 77 +/- 5% of control (P < 0.05, n = 5), respectively, 10 min after application of plasma from hypoxic donors. The decrease in venular shear rate was exclusively due to a reduction of venular blood flow, secondary to the upstream arteriolar vasoconstriction. Plasma from normoxic donors had no effects. Plasma from blood equilibrated in vitro for 5 min with 5% CO2-95% N2 did not alter LEA or shear rate of normoxic cremasters, suggesting that the putative mediator does not originate in blood cells. The effects of plasma from hypoxic rats persisted when the donors were pretreated with the mast cell stabilizer cromolyn, which prevents hypoxia-induced LEA. This suggests that the effects of hypoxic plasma are not due to inflammatory mediators released by adherent leukocytes in the donor rat. There was a positive correlation between LEA and mast cell degranulation observed histologically. These results support the idea that systemic hypoxia produces the release of a substance transported by the circulation that initiates the microvascular inflammation.  相似文献   

6.
Acute systemic hypoxia produces rapid leukocyte adherence in the rat mesenteric microcirculation, although the underlying mechanisms are not fully known. Hypoxia is known to increase reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, which could result in formation of the lipid inflammatory mediator leukotriene B(4) (LTB(4)). The goal of this study was to examine the role of LTB(4) in hypoxia-induced microvascular alterations. Using intravital microscopy, we determined the effect of the LTB(4) antagonist, LTB(4)-dimethyl amide (LTB(4)-DMA), on ROS generation and leukocyte adherence in mesenteric venules during hypoxia. Exogenous LTB(4) increased ROS generation to 144 +/- 8% compared with control values and also promoted leukocyte adherence. These responses to LTB(4) were blocked by pretreating the mesentery with LTB(4)-DMA. Leukopenia did not significantly attenuate the LTB(4)-induced increase in ROS generation (142 +/- 12.1%). LTB(4)-DMA substantially, though not completely, reduced hypoxia-induced ROS generation from 66 +/- 18% to 11 +/- 4% above control values. Hypoxia-induced leukocyte adherence was significantly attenuated by LTB(4)-DMA. Our results support a role for LTB(4) in the mechanism of hypoxia-induced ROS generation and leukocyte adherence in the rat mesenteric microcirculation.  相似文献   

7.
Aspirin that has been chemically combined with a nitric oxide (NO) donor (NCX-4016) has been shown to inhibit cyclooxygenase and prostaglandin generation while maintaining the inhibitory effects of aspirin. The possible role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the action of NCX-4016 in ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) has not been studied. Furthermore, we were interested in comparing the effects of a conventional NO donor [2,2'-hydroxynitrosohydrazino-bis-etanamine (DETA/NO)] and NCX-4016 at the microvascular level in the hamster cheek pouch visualized by using an intravital fluorescent microscopy technique. Microvascular injury was assessed by measuring diameter change, the perfused capillary length (PCL), and leukocyte adhesion. Animals were treated with NCX-4016 (100 mg/kg or 30 mg.kg(-1).day(-1) for 5 days po) or DETA-NO (0.5 mg/kg). Mean arterial blood pressure increased slightly but significantly after NCX-4016 treatment. During 5- and 15-min reperfusion, lipid peroxides in the systemic blood increased by 72 and 89% vs. baseline, respectively, and were still higher than in basal conditions after 30-min reperfusion in the I/R group. Pretreatment with NCX-4016 maintained ROS at normal levels; increased arteriolar diameter, blood flow, and PCL; and decreased leukocyte adhesion (P < 0.05). DETA-NO decreased ROS during 30-min reperfusion; however, later there was a significant increase during reperfusion. DETA-NO decreased leukocyte adhesion (P < 0.05) but microvascular permeability increased after 30 min of reperfusion. In conclusion, NCX-4016 attenuates oxidative stress and prevents arteriolar constriction during I/R, whereas DETA-NO increases lipid peroxides in the systemic blood and permeability after reperfusion.  相似文献   

8.
The molecular mechanisms underlying hypoxic responses in pulmonary and systemic arteries remain obscure. Here we for the first time report that acute hypoxia significantly increased total PKC and PKCepsilon activity in pulmonary, but not mesenteric arteries, while these two tissues showed comparable PKCepsilon protein expression and activation by the PKC activator phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. Hypoxia induced an increase in intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation in isolated pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMCs), but not in mesenteric artery SMCs. Inhibition of mitochondrial ROS generation with rotenone, myxothiazol, or glutathione peroxidase-1 overexpression prevented hypoxia-induced increases in total PKC and PKCepsilon activity in pulmonary arteries. The inhibitory effects of rotenone were reversed by exogenous hydrogen peroxide. A PKCepsilon translocation peptide inhibitor or PKCepsilon gene deletion decreased hypoxic increase in [Ca(2+)](i) in PASMCs, whereas the conventional PKC inhibitor GO6976 had no effect. These data suggest that acute hypoxia may specifically increase mitochondrial ROS generation, which subsequently activates PKC, particularly PKCepsilon, contributing to hypoxia-induced increase in [Ca(2+)](i) and contraction in PASMCs.  相似文献   

9.
Alveolar hypoxia produces a rapid and widespread systemic inflammation in rats. The inflammation is initiated by the release into the circulation of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) from alveolar macrophages (AMO) activated by the low alveolar Po(2). Circulating MCP-1 induces mast cell (MC) degranulation with renin release and activation of the local renin-angiotensin system, leading to microvascular leukocyte recruitment and increased vascular permeability. We investigated the effect of dexamethasone, a synthetic anti-inflammatory glucocorticoid, on the development of the systemic inflammation of alveolar hypoxia and its site(s) of action in the inflammatory cascade. The inflammatory steps investigated were the activation of primary cultures of AMO by hypoxia, the degranulation of MCs by MCP-1 in the mesentery microcirculation of rats, and the effect of angiotensin II (ANG II) on the leukocyte/endothelial interface of the mesentery microcirculation. Dexamethasone prevented the mesentery inflammation in conscious rats breathing 10% O(2) for 4 h by acting in all key steps of the inflammatory cascade. Dexamethasone: 1) blocked the hypoxia-induced AMO activation and the release of MCP-1 and abolished the increase in plasma MCP-1 of conscious, hypoxic rats; 2) prevented the MCP-1-induced degranulation of mesentery perivascular MCs and reduced the number of peritoneal MCs, and 3) blocked the leukocyte-endothelial adherence and the extravasation of albumin induced by topical ANG II in the mesentery. The effect at each site was sufficient to prevent the AMO-initiated inflammation of hypoxia. These results may explain the effectiveness of dexamethasone in the treatment of the systemic effects of alveolar hypoxia.  相似文献   

10.
Splanchnic ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) causes tissue hypoxia that triggers local and systemic microcirculatory inflammatory responses. We evaluated the effects of hyperoxia in I/R induced by 40-min superior mesenteric artery (SMA) occlusion and 120-min reperfusion in four groups of rats: 1) control (anesthesia only), 2) sham operated (all surgical procedures without vascular occlusion; air ventilation), 3) SMA I/R and air, 4) SMA I/R and 100% oxygen ventilation started 10 min before reperfusion. Leukocyte rolling and adhesion in mesenteric microvessels, pulmonary microvascular blood flow velocity (BFV), and macromolecular (FITC-albumin) flux into lungs were monitored by intravital videomicroscopy. We also determined pulmonary leukocyte infiltration. SMA I/R caused marked decreases in mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) and blood flow to the splanchnic and hindquarters vascular beds and pulmonary BFV and shear rates, followed by extensive increase in leukocyte rolling and adhesion and plugging of >50% of the mesenteric microvasculature. SMA I/R also caused marked increase in pulmonary sequestration of leukocytes and macromolecular leak with concomitant decrease in circulating leukocytes. Inhalation of 100% oxygen maintained MABP at significantly higher values (P < 0.001) but did not change regional blood flows. Oxygen therapy attenuated the increase in mesenteric leukocyte rolling and adherence (P < 0.0001) and maintained microvascular patency at values not significantly different from sham-operated animals. Hyperoxia also attenuated the decrease in pulmonary capillary BFV and shear rates, reduced leukocyte infiltration in the lungs (P < 0.001), and prevented the increase in pulmonary macromolecular leak (P < 0.001), maintaining it at values not different from sham-operated animals. The data suggest that beneficial effects of normobaric hyperoxia in splanchnic I/R are mediated by attenuation of both local and remote inflammatory microvascular responses.  相似文献   

11.
Microvascular endothelial cells play a key role in inflammation by undergoing activation and recruiting circulating immune cells into tissues and foci of inflammation, an early and rate-limiting step in the inflammatory process. We have previously [Binion et al., Gastroenterology112:1898-1907, 1997] shown that human intestinal microvascular endothelial cells (HIMEC) isolated from surgically resected inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patient tissue demonstrate significantly increased leukocyte binding in vitro compared to normal HIMEC. Our studies [Binion et al., Am. J. Physiol.275 (Gastrointest. Liver Physiol. 38):G592-G603, 1998] have also demonstrated that nitric oxide (NO) production by inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) normally plays a key role in downregulating HIMEC activation and leukocyte adhesion. Using primary cultures of HIMEC derived from normal and IBD patient tissues, we sought to determine whether alterations in iNOS-derived NO production underlies leukocyte hyperadhesion in IBD. Both nonselective (N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine) and specific (N-Iminoethyl-L-lysine) inhibitors of iNOS significantly increased leukocyte binding by normal HIMEC activated with cytokines and lipopolysaccharide (LPS), but had no effect on leukocyte adhesion by similarly activated IBD HIMEC. When compared to normal HIMEC, IBD endothelial cells had significantly decreased levels of iNOS mRNA, protein, and NO production following activation. Addition of exogenous NO by co-culture with normal HIMEC or by pharmacologic delivery with the long-acting NO donor detaNONOate restored a normal leukocyte binding pattern in the IBD HIMEC. These data suggest that loss of iNOS expression is a feature of chronically inflamed microvascular endothelial cells, which leads to enhanced leukocyte binding, potentially contributing to chronic, destructive inflammation in IBD.  相似文献   

12.
R Scalia  G Booth  D J Lefer 《FASEB journal》1999,13(9):1039-1046
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is an endothelium-specific secreted protein that induces vasodilation and increases endothelial release of nitric oxide (NO). NO is also reported to modulate leukocyte-endothelium interaction. Therefore, we hypothesized that VEGF might inhibit leukocyte-endothelium interaction via increased release of NO from the vascular endothelium. We used intravital microscopy of the rat mesenteric microcirculation to measure leukocyte-endothelium interactions 2, 4, and 24 h after systemic administration of VEGF to the rat (120 microg/kg, i.v., bolus). Superfusion of the rat mesentery with either 0.5 U/ml thrombin or 50 microM L-NAME consistently increased the number of rolling, adhering, and transmigrated leukocytes (P<0.01 vs. control mesenteries superfused with Krebs-Henseleit buffer). At 4 and 24 h posttreatment, VEGF significantly attenuated thrombin-induced and L-NAME-induced leukocyte rolling, adherence, and transmigration in rat mesenteric venules. In addition, adherence of isolated rat PMNs to thrombin-stimulated mesenteric artery segments in vitro was significantly reduced in mesenteric arteries isolated from VEGF-treated rats (P<0.001 vs. control rats). Direct measurement of NO demonstrated a threefold increase in basal NO release from aortic tissue of rats injected with VEGF, at 4 and 24 h posttreatment (P<0. 01 vs. aortic tissue from control rats). Finally, systemic administration of VEGF to ecNOS-deficient mice failed to inhibit leukocyte-endothelium interactions observed in peri-intestinal venules. We concluded that VEGF is a potent inhibitor of leukocyte-endothelium interaction, and this effect is specifically correlated to augmentation of NO release from the vascular endothelium.--Scalia, R., Booth, G., Lefer, D. J. Vascular endothelial growth factor attenuates leukocyte-endothelium interaction during acute endothelial dysfunction: essential role of endothelium-derived nitric oxide.  相似文献   

13.
Our laboratory has previously shown an attenuation of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension by exercise training (ET) (Henderson KK, Clancy RL, and Gonzalez NC. J Appl Physiol 90: 2057-2062, 2001), although the mechanism was not determined. The present study examined the effect of ET on the pulmonary arterial pressure (Pap) response of rats to short- and long-term hypoxia. After 3 wk of treadmill training, male rats were divided into two groups: one (HT) was placed in hypobaric hypoxia (380 Torr); the second remained in normoxia (NT). Both groups continued to train in normoxia for 10 days, after which they were studied at rest and during hypoxic and normoxic exercise. Sedentary normoxic (NS) and hypoxic (HS) littermates were exposed to the same environments as their trained counterparts. Resting and exercise hypoxic arterial P(O2) were higher in NT and HT than in NS and HS, respectively, although alveolar ventilation of trained rats was not higher. Lower alveolar-arterial P(O2) difference and higher effective lung diffusing capacity for O2 in NT vs. NS and in HT vs. HS suggest ET improved efficacy of gas exchange. Pap and Pap/cardiac output were lower in NT than NS in hypoxia, indicating that ET attenuates the initial vasoconstriction of hypoxia. However, ET had no effect on chronic hypoxic pulmonary hypertension: Pap and Pap/cardiac output in hypoxia were similar in HS vs HT. However, right ventricular weight was lower in HT than in HS, although Pap was not different. Because ET attenuates the initial pulmonary vasoconstriction of hypoxia, development of pulmonary hypertension may be delayed in HT rats, and the time during which right ventricular afterload is elevated may be shorter in this group. ET effects may improve the response to acute hypoxia by increasing efficacy of gas exchange and lowering right ventricular work.  相似文献   

14.
Diabetes mellitus compromises endothelium-dependent relaxation of blood vessels. This has been linked to the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which neutralise nitric oxide (NO) and interfere with vasodilator function. Experiments using chelators have emphasised the importance of ROS produced by transition metal catalysed reactions. However, particularly for the small arteries and arterioles that control microcirculatory blood flow, NO is not the only endothelium-derived mediator; endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF) has a major role. EDHF-mediated vasodilation is severely curtailed by diabetes; however, little information exists on the underlying pathophysiology. Deficits in the EDHF system, alone or in combination with the NO system, are crucial for the development of diabetic microvascular complications. To further elucidate the mechanisms involved, the aim was to examine the effects of diabetes and preventive and intervention chelator therapy with trientine on a preparation that has well-defined NO and EDHF-mediated responses, the rat mesenteric vascular bed. In phenylephrine-preconstricted preparations, maximum vasodilation to acetylcholine was reduced by 35 and 44% after 4 and 8 weeks of streptozotocin-induced diabetes, respectively. Trientine treatment over the first 4 weeks gave 72% protection; intervention therapy over the final 4 weeks prevented deterioration and corrected the initial deficit by 68%. These responses depend on both NO and EDHF. When the latter mechanism was isolated by NO synthase inhibition, diabetic deficits of 53.4 (4 weeks) and 65.4% (8 weeks) were revealed, that were 65% prevented and 50% corrected by trientine treatment. Neither diabetes nor trientine altered vascular smooth muscle responses to the NO donor, sodium nitroprusside (SNP). Thus, the data suggest that metal catalysed ROS production makes a substantial contribution to defects in both the EDHF and NO endothelial mechanisms in diabetes, which has therapeutic implications for microvascular complications.  相似文献   

15.
Diabetes mellitus compromises endothelium-dependent relaxation of blood vessels. This has been linked to the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which neutralise nitric oxide (NO) and interfere with vasodilator function. Experiments using chelators have emphasised the importance of ROS produced by transition metal catalysed reactions. However, particularly for the small arteries and arterioles that control microcirculatory blood flow, NO is not the only endothelium-derived mediator; endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF) has a major role. EDHF-mediated vasodilation is severely curtailed by diabetes; however, little information exists on the underlying pathophysiology. Deficits in the EDHF system, alone or in combination with the NO system, are crucial for the development of diabetic microvascular complications. To further elucidate the mechanisms involved, the aim was to examine the effects of diabetes and preventive and intervention chelator therapy with trientine on a preparation that has well-defined NO and EDHF-mediated responses, the rat mesenteric vascular bed. In phenylephrine-preconstricted preparations, maximum vasodilation to acetylcholine was reduced by 35 and 44% after 4 and 8 weeks of streptozotocin-induced diabetes, respectively. Trientine treatment over the first 4 weeks gave 72% protection; intervention therapy over the final 4 weeks prevented deterioration and corrected the initial deficit by 68%. These responses depend on both NO and EDHF. When the latter mechanism was isolated by NO synthase inhibition, diabetic deficits of 53.4 (4 weeks) and 65.4% (8 weeks) were revealed, that were 65% prevented and 50% corrected by trientine treatment. Neither diabetes nor trientine altered vascular smooth muscle responses to the NO donor, sodium nitroprusside (SNP). Thus, the data suggest that metal catalysed ROS production makes a substantial contribution to defects in both the EDHF and NO endothelial mechanisms in diabetes, which has therapeutic implications for microvascular complications.  相似文献   

16.
Systemic hypoxia, produced by lowering inspired Po2, induces a rapid inflammation in several microcirculations, including cremaster muscle. Mast cell activation is a necessary element of this response. Selective reduction of cremaster microvascular Po2 (PmO2) with normal systemic arterial Po2 (PaO2; cremaster hypoxia/systemic normoxia), however, does not elicit increased leukocyte-endothelial adherence (LEA) in cremaster venules. This could be due to a short time of leukocyte exposure to the hypoxic cremaster environment. Conversely, LEA increases when PaO2 is lowered, while cremaster PmO2 remains high (cremaster normoxia/systemic hypoxia). An alternative explanation of these results is that a mediator released from a central site during systemic hypoxia initiates the inflammatory cascade. We hypothesized that if this is the case, cremaster mast cells would be activated during cremaster normoxia/systemic hypoxia, but not during cremaster hypoxia/systemic normoxia. The microcirculation of rat cremaster muscles was visualized by using intravital microscopy. Cremaster PmO2 was measured with a phosphorescence quenching method. Cremaster hypoxia/systemic normoxia (PmO2 7 +/- 1 Torr, PaO2 87 +/- 2 Torr) did not increase LEA; however, topical application of the mast cell activator compound 48/80 under these conditions did increase LEA. The effect of compound 48/80 on LEA was blocked by topical cromolyn, a mast cell stabilizer. LEA increased during cremaster normoxia/systemic hypoxia, (PmO2 64 +/- 5 Torr, PaO2 33 +/- 2 Torr); this increase was blocked by topical cromolyn. The results suggest that mast cell stimulation occurs only when PaO2 is reduced, independent of cremaster PmO2, and support the idea of a mediator that is released during systemic hypoxia and initiates the inflammatory cascade.  相似文献   

17.
目的:观察消痰化瘀利窍方对慢性间歇性低氧(CIH)大鼠肠系膜动脉功能损伤的作用,并探讨其可能机制。方法:48只雄性SD大鼠随机分为4组(n=12),常氧对照组(Normoxia)、慢性间歇性低氧组(CIH)、慢性间歇性低氧中药干预组(Formula+CIH)、中药对照组(Formula)。CIH与Formula+CIH组置于间歇性低氧装置,通过充入氮气、氧气使O2含量在9%至21%间循环,每循环3min;Normoxia和Formula组则充入空气。其中,Formula+CIH与Formula组于每日造模前中药水煎液灌胃(24g/kg),而CIH组与Normoxia组给予等量生理盐水。造模结束后,应用HE染色观察各组大鼠肠系膜动脉的组织病理学改变,通过微血管环技术观察ACh、L-Arg诱导的肠系膜动脉舒张反应,通过ELISA技术检测大鼠造模前及造模21d血清一氧化氮(NO)的含量并应用Westernblot技术测定肠系膜动脉eNOS和p-eNOS的蛋白水平。结果:与Normoxia组相比,CIH组大鼠肠系膜动脉内皮明显损伤、中膜增厚,ACh、L-Arg诱导的肠系膜动脉舒张反应明显减弱,血清中NO水平及肠系膜动脉p-eNOS/eNOS比值显著降低。消痰化瘀利窍方干预能够减轻大鼠肠系膜动脉的内膜与中膜病理损伤,改善肠系膜动脉舒张功能,提高血清NO含量及肠系膜动脉eNOS磷酸化水平。而单纯给予消痰化瘀利窍方大鼠与Normoxia组相比各指标均未发现显著变化。结论:消痰化瘀利窍方可以减轻慢性间歇性低氧引起的大鼠肠系膜动脉功能损伤,其机制与提高NO的生物利用度有关。  相似文献   

18.
The importance of NADPH oxidase (Nox) in hypoxic responses in hypoxia-sensing cells, including pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMCs), remains uncertain. In this study, using Western blot analysis we found that the major Nox subunits Nox1, Nox4, p22(phox), p47(phox), and p67(phox) were equivalently expressed in mouse pulmonary and systemic (mesenteric) arteries. However, acute hypoxia significantly increased Nox activity and translocation of p47(phox) protein to the plasma membrane in pulmonary, but not mesenteric, arteries. The Nox inhibitor apocynin and p47(phox) gene deletion attenuated the hypoxic increase in intracellular concentrations of reactive oxygen species and Ca(2+) ([ROS](i) and [Ca(2+)](i)), as well as contractions in mouse PASMCs, and abolished the hypoxic activation of Nox in pulmonary arteries. The conventional/novel protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor chelerythrine, specific PKCepsilon translocation peptide inhibitor, and PKCepsilon gene deletion, but not the conventional PKC inhibitor GO6976, prevented the hypoxic increase in Nox activity in pulmonary arteries and [ROS](i) in PASMCs. The PKC activator phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate could increase Nox activity in pulmonary and mesenteric arteries. Inhibition of mitochondrial ROS generation with rotenone or myxothiazol prevented hypoxic activation of Nox. Glutathione peroxidase-1 (Gpx1) gene overexpression to enhance H(2)O(2) removal significantly inhibited the hypoxic activation of Nox, whereas Gpx1 gene deletion had the opposite effect. Exogenous H(2)O(2) increased Nox activity in pulmonary and mesenteric arteries. These findings suggest that acute hypoxia may distinctively activate Nox to increase [ROS](i) through the mitochondrial ROS-PKCepsilon signaling axis, providing a positive feedback mechanism to contribute to the hypoxic increase in [ROS](i) and [Ca(2+)](i) as well as contraction in PASMCs.  相似文献   

19.
Neutrophil (PMN) migration in the systemic and pulmonary circulation of rabbits was compared by using different inflammatory stimuli to determine the role of the leukocyte adhesion complex, CD11/CD18, in each of these vascular beds. The adhesion complex was blocked by administering the anti-CD18 mAb 60.3. The data show that mAb 60.3 blocks PMN emigration into inflammatory foci in the abdominal wall produced by implanting sponges containing either hydrochloric acid, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Escherichia coli endotoxin, or PMA. mAb 60.3 also inhibited PMN emigration in response to peritoneal instillation of S. pneumoniae. The effect of mAb 60.3 on PMN emigration in the lungs varied depending upon the stimulus. PMN failed to migrate into the PMA-induced pneumonia; however, mAb 60.3 pretreatment only partially inhibited endotoxin-induced pneumonia and did not inhibit S. pneumoniae or hydrochloric acid-induced pneumonias. PMN lavaged from the alveolar spaces in the Streptococcal pneumonia had similar quantities of mAb 60.3 bound to their surfaces as the circulating PMN. We conclude that the CD11/CD18 complex mediates PMN adherence in the systemic circulation. However, PMN adherence in the pulmonary circulation may occur by either CD18-dependent or -independent mechanisms that are specific to the inciting stimulus.  相似文献   

20.
Chronic hypoxia (CH) increases pulmonary arterial endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) expression and augments endothelium-derived nitric oxide (EDNO)-dependent vasodilation, whereas vasodilatory responses to exogenous NO are attenuated in CH rat lungs. We hypothesized that reactive oxygen species (ROS) inhibit NO-dependent pulmonary vasodilation following CH. To test this hypothesis, we examined responses to the EDNO-dependent vasodilator endothelin-1 (ET-1) and the NO donor S-nitroso-N-acetyl penicillamine (SNAP) in isolated lungs from control and CH rats in the presence or absence of ROS scavengers under normoxic or hypoxic ventilation. NOS was inhibited in lungs used for SNAP experiments to eliminate influences of endogenously produced NO. Additionally, dichlorofluorescein (DCF) fluorescence was measured as an index of ROS levels in isolated pressurized small pulmonary arteries from each group. We found that acute hypoxia increased DCF fluorescence and attenuated vasodilatory responses to ET-1 in lungs from control rats. The addition of ROS scavengers augmented ET-1-induced vasodilation in lungs from both groups during hypoxic ventilation. In contrast, upon NOS inhibition, DCF fluorescence was elevated and SNAP-induced vasodilation diminished in arteries from CH rats during normoxia, whereas acute hypoxia decreased DCF fluorescence, which correlated with augmented reactivity to SNAP in both groups. ROS scavengers enhanced SNAP-induced vasodilation in normoxia-ventilated lungs from CH rats similar to effects of hypoxic ventilation. We conclude that inhibition of NOS during normoxia leads to greater ROS generation in lungs from both control and CH rats. Furthermore, NOS inhibition reveals an effect of acute hypoxia to diminish ROS levels and augment NO-mediated pulmonary vasodilation.  相似文献   

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